Seven years after Boko Haram kidnapped 276 girls from a majority Christian school in Chibok, Nigeria, U.S. religious freedom advocates are lamenting escalating religious persecution in the African country.
The United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom noted the growing number of abductions of
students and other residents by terrorists and bandits copying Boko Haram’s
tactics.
“Nigerians have waited too long for the
violence to stop,” Tony Perkins, vice chair of the commission, said April 14.
“Seven years since the outrageous abduction of the Chibok schoolgirls, copycats
are still popping up all over, taking inspiration from Boko Haram and other
extremist groups. It is the Nigerian people who pay the price.”
600 students kidnapped since December
The commission noted the kidnappings of 600
students between December 2020 and March, compounded by “ongoing attacks
against Christian communities, Muslim congregations and houses of worship.”
Amnesty International said Wednesday that
kidnappings have forced the closure of hundreds of schools because of safety
concerns, and that hundreds of children have been “killed, raped, forced into
‘marriages’ or forced to join Boko Haram.”
The United States Commission on
International Religious Freedom estimates about 10.5 million children between
the ages of 5 and 14 are out of school in Nigeria because of the closures and
violence.
Various Nigerian government officials are
“apathetic and negligent,” Commissioner Frederick A. Davie said.
“Nigerian officials at all levels, from the
president (Muhammadu Buhari) and federal officials to local governors, police
commissioners and courts need to do more to prevent growing insecurity and hold
accountable those who perpetrate violent acts,” Davie said.
He urged the U.S. government to ensure
progress in Nigeria by leveraging the U.S. State Department’s December 2020
designation of Nigeria as a country of particular concern.
‘No lessons have been learned from the Chibok
tragedy’
Osai Ojigho, director of Amnesty International
Nigeria, said the failure of Nigerian authorities “shows that no lessons have
been learned from the Chibok tragedy. The authorities’ only response to
schoolchildren being targeted by insurgents and gunmen is to close schools,
which is increasingly putting the right to education at risk.”
Seven years after the Chibok kidnapping, about
100 of the abducted girls remain missing, although others have escaped or been
released. Leah Sharibu, kidnapped from her school in Dapchi in 2018, still
is being held for refusing to denounce her Christian faith, although 104
students were released to their families. Five girls were killed in the
kidnapping conducted by the Islamic State West Africa Province.
A series of kidnappings early this year in
northwest Nigeria, which resulted in the death of Christian student Benjamin
Habila, were blamed on loosely organized bandits copying Boko Haram.
But many terrorist groups, including Boko
Haram, Boko Haram faction of the Islamic State West Africa Province and
militant Fulani herdsmen are active in Nigeria’s northeast and Middle Belt.
Open Doors’ 2021 World Watch List designates
Nigeria as the ninth most dangerous country for Christians, compared to its
number 12 ranking on the 2020 list. From November 2019 to October 2020, more than
3,530 Nigerian Christians were killed for their faith, Open Doors said in its
report.
Christians are abducted and killed while going
about their daily lives. In one of the most recent attacks, Christians blame
militant Fulani herdsmen for kidnapping eight members of the Redeemed Christian
Church of God from the church bus as it traveled from Kaduna to Kafanchan in
late March, Morning Star News reported.
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